Domestic Bonds

KUNMING IRON & STEEL CO.: The company plans to sell 1.1
billion yuan ($177.2 million) of five-year bonds on April 10,
according to data compiled by Bloomberg. (Added April 2)

SHANDONG MINING MACHINERY GROUP CO.: The company plans to
sell 350 million yuan of one-year bonds on April 10, according
to data compiled by Bloomberg. (Added April 2)

CHINA DEVELOPMENT BANK CORP.: The lender plans to upsize
four batches of bonds by a total of as much as 20 billion yuan
today, according to a statement on the Chinese government bond
clearing house’s website. The bonds have maturities of one,
three, five and seven years. (Updated April 2)

SHENZHEN AIRLINES CO.: The company plans to sell 700
million yuan of one-year bonds on April 9, according to data
compiled by Bloomberg. (Added April 1)

YUNNAN LOGISTICS INDUSTRY GROUP CO.: The state-owned
company plans to issue 250 million yuan of one-year notes on
April 8, data compiled by Bloomberg show. (Added April 1)

PING AN INSURANCE (GROUP) CO.: The company won approval
from the China Securities Regulatory Commission to sell
convertible bonds, according to a statement on the regulator’s
website. The insurer renewed the mandate for the sale of up to
26 billion yuan of debt in December. (Added March 28)

MINISTRY OF FINANCE: The ministry will sell 26 billion yuan
of two-year bonds on April 3, according to a statement posted to
the Chinese government’s bond clearing house website. (Added
March 28)

CHONGQING RURAL COMMERCIAL BANK CO.: The lender plans to
issue as much as 5 billion yuan of bonds to replenish its tier 2
capital, according to a statement to the Hong Kong stock
exchange. (Added March 25)

JAGUAR LAND ROVER LTD.: The carmaker owned by India’s Tata
plans to sell $1 billion of bonds aimed at Chinese investors
this year, probably in June or July, in Beijing or Shanghai, the
Sunday Times reported, without saying where it got the
information from. (Added March 25)

SHANDONG GOLD MINING CO.: The company won approval from the
China Securities Regulatory Commission for a 3.3 billion yuan
bond sale, according to a statement to the Shanghai stock
exchange. (Added March 25)

ZHEJIANG EXPRESSWAY CO.: The company proposes selling up to
1 billion yuan of bonds that need approval from shareholders and
the China Securities Regulatory Commission, according to a
statement to the Hong Kong stock exchange. (Added March 20)

SHANGHAI SHENTONG METRO CO.: The company plans to sell 6
billion yuan of five-year bonds, according to a report from
China Knowledge. (Added March 18)

HUATAI SECURITIES CO: The company’s board approved issuance
of up to 10 billion yuan of bonds, according to a statement
posted to the Shanghai stock exchange. (Added March 12)

HARBIN ELECTRIC CO.: The company has won regulatory
approval to sell five-year bonds with the size of the first
portion amounting to 3 billion yuan, according to a statement to
the Hong Kong stock exchange. (Added March 7)

MAANSHAN IRON & STEEL: The company’s board approved the
sale of 900 million yuan of five-year bonds by its subsidiary in
the eastern Chinese city of Hefei, according to a statement to
the Shanghai Stock Exchange. (Added March 6)

Offshore Bonds

CHANG HWA COMMERCIAL BANK: The lender plans to sell 3
billion yuan of bonds with a maturity of three to five years,
according to a company statement to the Taiwan Stock Exchange.
(Added April 1)

DEUTSCHE BANK AG: The bank won approval from Taiwan’s
central bank to sell $1 billion of foreign-currency bonds on the
island, according to a person familiar with the matter. The
lender previously applied to the central bank to sell as much as
2 billion yuan of five- and three-year notes. The three-year
debt was priced at 2.3 percent, Reuters reported. (Updated March
26)

BARCLAYS PLC: The bank plans to sell yuan-denominated bonds
in Taiwan, Taiwan Chief Executive Officer Cosmas Lu said at a
yuan business forum in Taipei on March 8. (Added March 11)

HSBC HOLDINGS PLC: The lender is evaluating a possible sale
of yuan bonds in Taiwan, Sam Ang, senior vice president and
chief auditor at HSBC Taiwan, said at the yuan conference.
(Added March 11)